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Dive into the research topics where Philip A. Kern is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip A. Kern.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1995

The expression of tumor necrosis factor in human adipose tissue. Regulation by obesity, weight loss, and relationship to lipoprotein lipase.

Philip A. Kern; Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh; John M. Ong; R. J. Bosch; R. Deem; Rosa B. Simsolo

A previous study reported the increased expression of the cytokine TNF in the adipose tissue of genetically obese rodents. To examine this paradigm in humans, we studied TNF expression in lean, obese, and reduced-obese human subjects. TNF mRNA was demonstrated in human adipocytes and adipose tissue by Northern blotting and PCR. TNF protein was quantitated by Western blotting and ELISA in both adipose tissue and the medium surrounding adipose tissue. Using quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR), TNF mRNA levels were examined in the adipose tissue of 39 nondiabetic subjects, spanning a broad range of body mass index (BMI). There was a significant increase in adipose TNF mRNA levels with increasing adiposity. There was a significant correlation between TNF mRNA and percent body fat (r = 0.46, P < 0.05, n = 23). TNF mRNA tended to decrease in very obese subjects, but when subjects with a BMI > 45 kg/m2 were excluded, there was a significant correlation between TNF mRNA and BMI (r = 0.37, P < 0.05, n = 32). In addition, there was a significant decrease in adipose TNF with weight loss. In 11 obese subjects who lost between 14 and 66 kg (mean 34.7 kg, or 26.6% of initial weight), TNF mRNA levels decreased to 58% of initial levels after weight loss (P < 0.005), and TNF protein decreased to 46% of initial levels (P < 0.02). TNF is known to inhibit LPL activity. When fasting adipose LPL activity was measured in these subjects, there was a significant inverse relationship between TNF expression and LPL activity (r = -0.39, P < 0.02, n = 39). With weight loss, LPL activity increased to 411% of initial levels. However, the magnitude of the increase in LPL did not correlate with the decrease in TNF. Thus, TNF is expressed in human adipocytes. TNF is elevated in most obese subjects and is decreased by weight loss. In addition, there is an inverse relationship between TNF and LPL expression. These data suggest that endogenous TNF expression in adipose tissue may help limit obesity in some subjects, perhaps by increasing insulin resistance and decreasing LPL.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996

The expression of TNF alpha by human muscle. Relationship to insulin resistance.

Mehrnoosh Saghizadeh; John M. Ong; W T Garvey; Robert R. Henry; Philip A. Kern

TNFalpha is orverexpressed in the adipose tissue of obese rodents and humans, and is associated with insulin resistance. To more closely link TNF expression with whole body insulin action, we examined the expression of TNF by muscle, which is responsible for the majority of glucose uptake in vivo. Using RT-PCR, TNF was detected in human heart, in skeletal muscle from humans and rats, and in cultured human myocytes. Using competitive RT-PCR, TNF was quantitated in the muscle biopsy specimens from 15 subjects whose insulin sensitivity had been characterized using the glucose clamp. technique. TNF expression in the insulin resistant subjects and the diabetic patients was fourfold higher than in the insulin sensitive subjects, and there was a significant inverse linear relationship between maximal glucose disposal rate and muscle TNF (r = -0.60, P < 0.02). In nine subjects, muscle cells from vastus lateralis muscle biopsies were placed into tissue culture for 4 wk, and induced to differentiate into myotubes. TNF was secreted into the medium from these cells, and cells from diabetic patients expressed threefold more TNF than cells from nondiabetic subjects. Thus, TNF is expressed in human muscle, and is expressed at a higher level in the muscle tissue and in the cultured muscle cells from insulin resistant and diabetic subjects. These data suggest another mechanism by which TNF may play an important role in human insulin resistance.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Adipocytokines and the Metabolic Complications of Obesity

Neda Rasouli; Philip A. Kern

CONTEXT Adipose tissue is increasingly recognized as an active endocrine organ with many secretory products and part of the innate immune system. With obesity, macrophages infiltrate adipose tissue, and numerous adipocytokines are released by both macrophages and adipocytes. Adipocytokines play important roles in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and associated metabolic complications such as dyslipidemia, hypertension, and premature heart disease. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION Published literature was analyzed with the intent of addressing the role of the major adipose secretory proteins in human obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS This review analyzes the characteristics of different adipocytokines, including leptin, adiponectin, pro-inflammatory cytokines, resistin, retinol binding protein 4, visfatin, and others, and their roles in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance. CONCLUSIONS Inflamed fat in obesity secretes an array of proteins implicated in the impairment of insulin signaling. Further studies are needed to understand the triggers that initiate inflammation in adipose tissue and the role of each adipokine in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Adipose tissue macrophages in insulin-resistant subjects are associated with collagen VI and fibrosis and demonstrate alternative activation

Michael Spencer; Aiwei Yao-Borengasser; Resat Unal; Neda Rasouli; Catherine M. Gurley; Beibei Zhu; Charlotte A. Peterson; Philip A. Kern

Adipose tissue macrophages are associated with insulin resistance and are linked to changes in the extracellular matrix. To better characterize adipose macrophages, the extracellular matrix, and adipocyte-macrophage interactions, gene expression from adipose tissue and the stromal vascular fraction was assessed for markers of inflammation and fibrosis, and macrophages from obese and lean subjects were counted and characterized immunohistochemically. Coculture experiments examined the effects of adipocyte-macrophage interaction. Collagen VI gene expression was associated with insulin sensitivity and CD68 (r = -0.56 and 0.60, P < 0.0001) and with other markers of inflammation and fibrosis. Compared with adipose tissue from lean subjects, adipose tissue from obese subjects contained increased areas of fibrosis, which correlated inversely with insulin sensitivity (r = -0.58, P < 0.02) and positively with macrophage number (r = 0.70, P < 0.01). Although macrophages in crownlike structures (CLS) were more abundant in obese adipose tissue, the majority of macrophages were associated with fibrosis and were not organized in CLS. Macrophages in CLS were predominantly M1, but most other macrophages, particularly those in fibrotic areas, were M2 and also expressed CD150, a marker of M2c macrophages. Coculture of THP-1 macrophages with adipocytes promoted the M2 phenotype, with a lower level of IL-1 expression and a higher ratio of IL-10 to IL-12. Transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) was more abundant in M2 macrophages and was further increased by coculture with adipocytes. Downstream effectors of TGF-β, such as plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, collagen VI, and phosphorylated Smad, were increased in macrophages and adipocytes. Thus adipose tissue of insulin-resistant humans demonstrated increased fibrosis, M2 macrophage abundance, and TGF-β activity.


Diabetes | 2006

OXPAT/PAT-1 Is a PPAR-Induced Lipid Droplet Protein That Promotes Fatty Acid Utilization

Nathan E. Wolins; Benjamin K. Quaynor; James R. Skinner; Anatoly Tzekov; Michelle A. Croce; Matthew C. Gropler; Vijayalakshmi Varma; Aiwei Yao-Borengasser; Neda Rasouli; Philip A. Kern; Brian N. Finck; Perry E. Bickel

Lipid droplet proteins of the PAT (perilipin, adipophilin, and TIP47) family regulate cellular neutral lipid stores. We have studied a new member of this family, PAT-1, and found that it is expressed in highly oxidative tissues. We refer to this protein as “OXPAT.” Physiologic lipid loading of mouse liver by fasting enriches OXPAT in the lipid droplet tissue fraction. OXPAT resides on lipid droplets with the PAT protein adipophilin in primary cardiomyocytes. Ectopic expression of OXPAT promotes fatty acid–induced triacylglycerol accumulation, long-chain fatty acid oxidation, and mRNAs associated with oxidative metabolism. Consistent with these observations, OXPAT is induced in mouse adipose tissue, striated muscle, and liver by physiological (fasting), pathophysiological (insulin deficiency), pharmacological (peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor [PPAR] agonists), and genetic (muscle-specific PPARα overexpression) perturbations that increase fatty acid utilization. In humans with impaired glucose tolerance, PPARγ agonist treatment induces adipose OXPAT mRNA. Further, adipose OXPAT mRNA negatively correlates with BMI in nondiabetic humans. Our collective data in cells, mice, and humans suggest that OXPAT is a marker for PPAR activation and fatty acid oxidation. OXPAT likely contributes to adaptive responses to the fatty acid burden that accompanies fasting, insulin deficiency, and overnutrition, responses that are defective in obesity and type 2 diabetes.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1990

Cholesterol-lowering effect of hydroxychloroquine in patients with rheumatic disease: Reversal of deleterious effects of steroids on lipids

Daniel J. Wallace; Allan L. Metzger; Vera J. Stecher; Barry Turnbull; Philip A. Kern

PURPOSE The effects of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) on serum levels of cholesterol, triglycerides, and high- (HDL) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) were studied in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or systemic lupus erythematosus. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 155 women were divided into the following treatment groups: Group A: patients taking HCQ and no steroids (n = 58); Group B: patients taking steroids and no HCQ (n = 35); Group C: patients receiving both HCQ and steroids (n = 18); and Group D: patients receiving neither HCQ nor steroids (n = 44). RESULTS HCQ therapy had a high statistical association with low serum levels of cholesterol (181 mg/dL; p = 0.0006), triglycerides (106 mg/dL; p = 0.0459), and LDL (101 mg/dL; p = 0.0004), irrespective of concomitant steroid administration. The HCQ-treated group (A) had lower cholesterol (181 mg/dL; p = 0.0039) and LDL (101 mg/dL; p = 0.007) levels than those receiving neither HCQ nor steroids (205 mg/dL) and 128 mg/dL) (Group D). No HDL differences were observed. CONCLUSION The effects of HCQ do not appear to be due to changes in diet or weight, and the drug was well tolerated. Although the mechanism of cholesterol lowering by HCQ is not known, this drug deserves further investigation for its lipid-lowering properties.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Markers Are Associated with Obesity in Nondiabetic Subjects

Neeraj K. Sharma; Swapan K. Das; Ashis K. Mondal; Oksana G. Hackney; Winston S. Chu; Philip A. Kern; Neda Rasouli; Horace J. Spencer; Aiwei Yao-Borengasser; Steven C. Elbein

OBJECTIVE Adipocyte and hepatocyte endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response is activated in dietary and genetic models of obesity in mice. We hypothesized that ER stress was also activated and associated with reduced insulin sensitivity (SI) in human obesity. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We recruited 78 healthy, nondiabetic individuals over a spectrum of body mass index (BMI) who underwent oral and iv glucose tolerance tests, and fasting sc adipose and muscle biopsies. We tested expression of 18 genes and levels of total and phosphorylated eukaryotic initiation factor 2alpha, c-jun, and c-Jun N-terminal kinase 1 in adipose tissue. We compared gene expression in stromal vascular and adipocyte fractions in paired samples from 22 individuals, and tested clustering on gene and protein markers. RESULTS Adipocyte expression of most markers of ER stress, including chaperones downstream of activating transcription factor 6, were significantly correlated with BMI and percent fat (r>0.5; P<0.00001). Phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor 2alpha but not of c-Jun N-terminal kinase 1 or c-jun was increased with obesity. ER stress response (as elsewhere) was also increased with obesity in a second set of 86 individuals, and in the combined sample (n=161). The increase was only partially attributable to the stromal vascular fraction and macrophage infiltration. ER stress markers were only modestly correlated with S(I). Clustering algorithms supported ER stress activation with high BMI but not low SI. CONCLUSIONS Multiple markers of ER stress are activated in human adipose with obesity, particularly for protective chaperones downstream of activating transcription factor 6alpha.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Muscle inflammatory response and insulin resistance: synergistic interaction between macrophages and fatty acids leads to impaired insulin action

Vijayalakshmi Varma; Aiwei Yao-Borengasser; Neda Rasouli; Greg T. Nolen; Bounleut Phanavanh; Tasha Starks; Cathy M. Gurley; Pippa Simpson; Robert E. McGehee; Philip A. Kern; Charlotte A. Peterson

Obesity is characterized by adipose tissue expansion as well as macrophage infiltration of adipose tissue. This results in an increase in circulating inflammatory cytokines and nonesterified fatty acids, factors that cause skeletal muscle insulin resistance. Whether obesity also results in skeletal muscle inflammation is not known. In this study, we quantified macrophages immunohistochemically in vastus lateralis biopsies from eight obese and eight lean subjects. Our study demonstrates that macrophages infiltrate skeletal muscle in obesity, and we developed an in vitro system to study this mechanistically. Myoblasts were isolated from vastus lateralis biopsies and differentiated in culture. Coculture of differentiated human myotubes with macrophages in the presence of palmitic acid, to mimic an obese environment, revealed that macrophages in the presence of palmitic acid synergistically augment cytokine and chemokine expression in myotubes, decrease IkappaB-alpha protein expression, increase phosphorylated JNK, decrease phosphorylated Akt, and increase markers of muscle atrophy. These results suggest that macrophages alter the inflammatory state of muscle cells in an obese milieu, inhibiting insulin signaling. Thus in obesity both adipose tissue and skeletal muscle inflammation may contribute to insulin resistance.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1989

Effect of feeding and obesity on lipoprotein lipase activity, immunoreactive protein, and messenger RNA levels in human adipose tissue.

John M. Ong; Philip A. Kern

Previous studies have demonstrated higher levels of adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (LPL) catalytic activity in obese subjects, and in response to a meal. To examine the cellular mechanism of this increase in activity, LPL activity, immunoreactive mass, and mRNA level were measured in lean and obese subjects both before and 4 h after a carbohydrate-rich meal. Heparin-releasable (HR) LPL activity was approximately 2.5-fold higher in the 15 obese subjects, when compared with six lean subjects. However, there was no difference in LPL immunoreactive mass between the lean and obese subjects. In response to the meal, there was a 2.2-fold increase in total adipose tissue LPL activity in the lean subjects due to an increase in both the HR fraction, as well as the adipose fraction extracted with detergents. However, no increase in LPL immunoreactive mass was observed in any adipose tissue LPL fraction, resulting in an increase in LPL specific activity in response to the meal. In the obese subjects, there was no significant increase in LPL activity in response to feeding, and also no increase in immunoreactive mass or specific activity. After extraction of RNA, there was no difference in either the relative proportion of the 3.6- and 3.4-kb human LPL mRNA transcripts, nor in the quantity of LPL mRNA in response to feeding. Thus, these data suggest that the increase in LPL activity under these conditions occurs through a posttranslational activation of a previously inactive LPL precursor.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Adipose tissue extracellular matrix and vascular abnormalities in obesity and insulin resistance.

Michael Spencer; Resat Unal; Beibei Zhu; Neda Rasouli; Robert E. McGehee; Charlotte A. Peterson; Philip A. Kern

CONTEXT Insulin resistance is associated with inflammation, fibrosis, and hypoxia in adipose tissue. OBJECTIVE This study was intended to better characterize the extracellular matrix (ECM) and vascularity of insulin-resistant adipose tissue. DESIGN Adipose expression of collagens, elastin, and angiogenic factors was assessed using real-time RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry (IHC) in abdominal sc adipose tissue. Adipocyte-macrophage coculture experiments examined the effects of polarized macrophages on adipose ECM gene expression, and the effects of collagens were measured in an angiogenesis assay. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING A total of 74 nondiabetic subjects participated at a University Clinical Research Center. INTERVENTIONS Interventions included baseline adipose biopsy and measurement of insulin sensitivity. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Outcome measures included characterization of vascularity and ECM in adipose tissue. RESULTS CD31 (an endothelial marker) mRNA showed no significant correlation with body mass index or insulin sensitivity. In a subgroup of 17 subjects (nine obese, eight lean), CD31-positive capillary number in obese was decreased by 58%, whereas larger vessels were increased by 70%, accounting for the lack of change in CD31 expression with obesity. Using IHC, obese (compared with lean) subjects had decreased elastin and increased collagen V expression, and adipocytes cocultured with M2 macrophages had reduced elastin and increased collagen V expression. In obese subjects, collagen V was colocalized with large blood vessels, and the addition of collagen V to an angiogenesis assay inhibited endothelial budding. CONCLUSIONS The adipose tissue from obese/insulin-resistant subjects has fewer capillaries and more large vessels as compared with lean subjects. The ECM of adipose tissue may play an important role in regulating the expandability as well as angiogenesis of adipose tissue.

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Neda Rasouli

University of Colorado Denver

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Gouri Ranganathan

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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John M. Ong

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Aiwei Yao-Borengasser

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Beibei Zhu

University of Kentucky

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Robert E. McGehee

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Resat Unal

University of Kentucky

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Vijayalakshmi Varma

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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